Easter Funny Makeup
How to Play
Game Overview
I tried Easter Funny Makeup with my little cousin, and honestly it''s exactly what it sounds like -- a no-pressure face painting game for Easter. You''re basically sitting down with Eliza and her niece, and they hand you a bunch of digital brushes and stickers shaped like eggs, bunnies, flowers, butterflies, and rainbows. The whole thing is bright and cheerful, with pastel colors everywhere and a soft, cartoonish art style that feels like a kids'' coloring book come to life. There''s no timer or score to stress about, which is nice -- you just pick a face template or start from scratch, then smear paint around however you want. The tools are simple: click or tap to apply colors, then layer on little decorations. It''s got that laid-back vibe where you can make something ridiculous, like a bunny with rainbow eyebrows and a flower on its nose, and the game doesn''t care. What surprised me is how much you can do beyond just painting -- there are hairstyles to change and accessories like bonnets or bunny ears to add. It''s not deep, but it doesn''t need to be. Any kid who likes dress-up games or digital coloring will probably get hooked for a while, and honestly even adults who just want to zone out for ten minutes might find it soothing. The controls are just clicks or taps, so it''s dead simple on a phone or computer. You can save your creation as a PNG too, which my cousin used to print out and stick on the fridge.
About Easter Funny Makeup
So you fire up Easter Funny Makeup and you're immediately in a bright, pastel-colored room with Eliza and her niece. The main menu has a few options but the core loop is simple: pick a face to work on -- either Eliza or the niece -- and then you get a blank canvas that's their actual face. Your hands are clicking or tapping to choose from a palette of face paints, each one a seasonal symbol: eggs, bunnies, flowers, butterflies, rainbows. You paint by clicking a shape and then placing it somewhere on the face, which sounds easy but the little niece squirms sometimes if you put something in a ticklish spot -- that's a funny animation that plays if you keep clicking the same area too fast. The first level is called "Spring Basics" and it's just five paints to apply anywhere, no pressure. But then "Bunny Blitz" introduces a timer -- you have 90 seconds to cover the face with at least three bunnies and two eggs, and the niece starts giggling if you rush, which actually distorts the face a bit and moves your paint spots. That's annoying at first but you learn to work with it. Later, "Rainbow Rush" throws in multiple layers -- you have to paint a rainbow across the forehead, but the colors have to be in order from red to violet, and if you miss one, the whole thing fades out and you restart that section. The satisfying moment is when you nail that rainbow and it sparkles for a second before you move on. After face painting, you get to the makeup station -- that's where you pick pre-made eye shadow, blush, and lipstick designs. There's a system where you unlock new makeup palettes by completing levels with high scores -- like the "Golden Egg" palette which makes everything shimmer. Hairstyles come next: you can choose from ponytails, braids, or a messy bun, and there's a mini-game where you have to click on stray hairs to style them into place -- miss too many and the niece's hair goes wild and you have to start over. Accessories are last -- a basket of bunny ears, flower crowns, and rainbow sunglasses. What's cool is that you can mix and match, and the game saves your combo as a preset for later. But there's no difficulty curve that gets brutally hard -- it stays more about creativity than precision. You can save your final face as a PNG, which is nice for sharing. The whole thing takes maybe 15 minutes per session but you can replay to try different looks. The niece's expressions change based on what you put on her -- she'll cross her eyes if you paint a butterfly on her nose, which is honestly the best part. No real fail state except running out of time in specific levels, but even then you just retry that segment.
Tips & Tricks
The makeup palette is way more forgiving than you'd think. If you mess up a stroke, just keep painting over it -- the layers blend together nicely instead of turning into a muddy mess. I wasted time restarting faces early on, but that's totally unnecessary. For the hair section, the bunny ear clips look cute but they actually clip through most hairstyles if you're not careful -- stick to the bow or flower crown for cleaner screenshots. The rainbow paint tool has a weird quirk where it only shows full spectrum if you swipe fast; slow strokes give you a single color streak, which is actually useful for making striped patterns without switching brushes. Don't ignore the little sparkle sticker in the accessories tab -- it's tiny but applying it over the cheek area makes the whole face pop in the saved PNG. One thing that clicked way later: you can double-tap any accessory to rotate it 90 degrees, which is great for positioning butterflies as hair clips instead of face decals. The undo button only remembers your last three actions, so if you go wild with five brush strokes and then regret it, you're stuck. Pace yourself, especially with the egg patterns -- they look best when you space them out rather than clumping them on one cheek. Saved images keep the background transparent if you zoom in close before export, which makes them perfect for pasting into Easter cards.
Comments
Please login to leave a comment.